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I think the importance of serpentine soil is that many plants can't grow in it, so it cutsdown the competition for those that can.
Hi Erle, The following is from one of Russell Graham's posts to T-List"What I have read suggests rivale "never" occurs naturally except on serpentine. Yet it is grown successfully in gardens in many parts of the world without any exceptional effort to modify the "local" soils wherever the plant is grown, other than to offer typical garden soils which may be quite unlike a serpentine environment." http://mailman.science.uu.nl/pipermail/trillium-l/2014-February/022730.htmlI have found they do quite well in our garden beds which are also quite unlike a serpentine environment.Very beautiful seedlings Erle. I'm hoping as more of my T-List seed opens, some will be as dark as yours. Unfortunately, I never ordered seeds from JJA.Julie
Or, you could leave them as a group and plant the whole lot in a larger place, either a pot or I'd go for a spot in the garden, to give them ample expansion room without having tiny plants separated and fending for themselves. Maybe separate them further in another year.
Hi Erle, you might want to also add this to the Archibald seed thread: http://www.srgc.net/forum/index.php?topic=9360.0? Cheers, M